F. D. Maurice was a leading nineteenth-century theologian famous for founding the movement called Christian Socialism. In the first major reassessment of Maurice's work for many years, Jeremy Morris argues that his importance above all lay in his thinking about the Christian Church, and about its social role. At a time when many people feared the collapse of Christianity and of social order, Maurice tried to show that Christians, despite their many differences, had a responsibility to the whole of society. By appreciating the source and strength of each other's convictions, they could learn to work together to restore the authority of the Christian faith. It was the Church of England's task in particular to bring its message of hope to the poor as well as the rich.
Introduction: The End of the Old Order 1. The Demise of the Confessional State 2. The Emergence of the Maurician Synthesis: A Coleridgean in Theology 3. The Catholicity of Protestantism - Redescribing the Church 4. Church and Nation 5. The Church in Society 6. The Crisis in Belief 7. Conclusion
Jeremy Morris is Dean, Fellow, and Director of Studies, Trinity Hall, University of Cambridge.